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IMG_0056"The beauty of wine should be grown, not made." Perhaps it was this motto on the winery's website that inspired me to buy the wine at the time (when I visited the winemaker). Perhaps it was also my ambivalent relationship with the Domina, which is present in this Cunvée (I don't know in what proportion). In any case, the wine stayed (too) long, got older and older, hid behind the other bottles, so that it - which according to reliable information was supposed to be drunk until 2005 - only came into the glass now, almost ten years too late. And? The wine was still present, a fine, polished - not exciting - Pinot Noir. Whether the Domina (which I judged with scepticism or disapproval) helped or hurt it, I cannot judge. Familiar with Pinot Noirs (the most important grape variety in German-speaking Switzerland), I am now "neutral" about the wine.weinberg-randersacker112~_v-image512_-6a0b0d9618fb94fd9ee05a84a1099a13ec9d3321 In any case - according to my notes at the time - it was quite acceptable (up to good) among the Pinot Noirs tasted at the time, but ranked well behind the Pinot Noirs from the Bündner Herrschaft (Switzerland) that I know (and also drink very often!) And today? The power has somewhat disappeared from the wine, the fruit (berry notes) has retreated, the wood and toasted notes have also been "swallowed", the result is a fine, ageing, slightly sensual drop. Whether it would have been worth drinking it earlier (not almost ten years too late), I don't know. I only know that the wine yesterday was (for me) a good, thoroughly positive experience.

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